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A major problem for immunologists had long been to determine how cells of the immune system could produce millions of distinct antibodies - and produce them on demand. The clonal selection theory explains that cells with genetic instructions to produce each antibody exist in the body in small numbers until exposure to the right molecule - the antigen - triggers the selective cloning that will reproduce the required cells.
But how can so many different antibody-producing cells be generated from such limited genetic material? The solution to this question came from new applications of molecular biology, and, as the authors argue, the impact of the new techniques changed both the methods and the concepts of immunology.
The Generation of Diversity is an intellectual history of the major theoretical problem in immunology and its resolution in the post-World War II period. It will provide for immunologists essential background for understanding the conceptual conflicts occurring in the field today.
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Subjects
Antibody diversity, Cellular Immunity, Clonal selection theory, History, Immunity, Cellular, Molecular biology, Molecular immunology, Physiology, Immunreaktion, Moleculaire biologie, Geschichte 1940-1996, Sélection clonale, Théorie de la, Forschung, Immunologische Erkennung, Immunologie, Immunologie moléculaire, Cloning, Immunoglobulins, ImmunityEdition | Availability |
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The generation of diversity: clonal selection theory and the rise of molecular immunology
1997, Harvard University Press
in English
0674771818 9780674771819
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Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [439]-492) and index.
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